The new Warhammer 40k Starter Set lineup is here, and GW is rolling out three intro boxes, fresh paint sets, and ready-painted Armageddon terrain right alongside it.
GW just tucked one of the most interesting reveals from the Big Summer Preview into the cheapest box on the shelf! The Summer Preview showed off the new beginner products for Warhammer 40k 11th Edition, and now the Armageddon launch box has a full retail ecosystem forming around it (to the surprise of no one).
Now, there are three new starter boxes in the mix, ranging from full Combat Patrol-sized forces down to a 12-mini intro set. Add in paint bundles, push-fit terrain, and a ready-painted Armageddon battlefield, and this launch wave is doing a lot more than just handing new players some dice and a rules booklet.
Anyone following the 11th Edition hub already knew the Combat Patrol Companion + Terrain Area Set was coming, but this three-tier starter split is probably the bigger story.
And yes, the brand-new Space Marines Lieutenant and fresh Ork sculpts are debuting in the smallest box first. That’s what is hidden in plain sight, and it’s exactly the kind of thing that’ll have veteran players reaching for a beginner set that very much wasn’t aimed at them.
The New Warhammer 40k Starter Set Doubles as a Full Combat Patrol Tier
Updated on July 10th 2026, by Rob Baer with the latest terrain updates
- Three-tier intro lineup: full Combat Patrol Starter Set, single-faction Getting Started boxes, and a 12-mini Introductory Set fill out the entry shelf for 11th Edition.
- New minis debut in the cheapest box: the Space Marines Lieutenant, Intercessors, Ork Nob, and Boyz all ship first in the Introductory Set, not the flagship Starter Set.
- Ready-painted terrain finally arrives: Battlefields: Armageddon delivers 28 factory-painted pieces plus a matching Battle Mat for Strike Force games.
11th Edition Warhammer 40k Starter Sets: Retail Price & Release Date
- Warhammer 40k Starter Sets Release Date: July 25th, 2026
- Retail Price (MSRP/RRP): $45-$250 (USD). Regional pricing is listed below.
- The big Armageddon and separate Pre-Painted Terrain sets are still on the horizon, with exact pricing and release date TBD.
The big new flagship Starter box is doing what these big edition starter sets usually do, just with the Combat Patrol angle pushed a little harder.
Warhammer 40k Starter Set: $250 (USA), $300 (Canada), $395 (Australia), £155 (UK), €200 (EU)
In the new Starter Set, you get two complete Combat Patrol armies, Space Marines and Orks, plus a Core Rules book, 15 pieces of the new unpainted terrain, a double-sided game board, range rulers, dice, and a dedicated Starter Guide.
It’s the full kitchen-table package, built to walk a brand-new player from their first dice roll into standard Combat Patrol matches.
Veterans will be eyeing it too, because two push-fit armies still make buying these worth it. Plus, the post-Armageddon roadmap suggests this plastic won’t be collecting dust once the launch hype cools off either.
Current 11th Edition Warhammer 40k Starter Set Contents List:
Space Marines:
- 1x Captain with Relic Shield
- 1x Librarian
- 5x Intercessor Squad (half box)
- 5x Vanguard Veterans
- 1x Land Speeder
Orks:
- 1x Warboss
- 1x Weirdboy
- 20x Boyz
- 10x Gretchin
- 1x War Trakk
Extras & terrain:
- 1x Core rules booklet
- 10x Dice
- 2x Rulers
- 1x Game mat
- 4x ruins
- 4x medium-sized piece
- 8x pieces of scatter terrain
11th Edition Warhammer 40k Starter Set Price By Region: $250 (USA), $300 (Canada), $395 (Australia), £155 (UK), €200 (EU)
- Total MSRP: $656
- Savings Versus Box Price: $406
Getting Started Sets Cover Space Marines or Orks Solo
If you’ve already picked a side, GW is giving you an easier faction-specific option now. So now there is no paying for half of the box you don’t want, or orphaned Marines sitting around if your heart belongs to greenskins.
The Getting Started with Space Marines and Getting Started with Orks boxes each include a full Combat Patrol of minis, a starter paintbrush, an introductory guide, and 11 paints picked for that army.
The faction-focused paint selection is really nice for new players who don’t have a giant collection built up yet. New players routinely overspend on paint pots they don’t need yet, usually after staring at a rack of similarly looking whites, reds, and metallics as if it’s some kind of hobby trial by fire.
These boxes cut that down to the basics and save you some cash, too. Pair one with the Combat Patrol guide, and any new player now has a pretty easy progression for their first few games and hobby sessions.
Getting Started With Space Marines Box
Current Getting Started with Space Marines Contents List:
- 1x Captain with Relic Shield
- 1x Librarian
- 5x Intercessors
- 5x Vanguard Veterans with jump packs
- 1x Land Speeder
- 11x paints
- 1x starter paintbrush
- 1x Space Marines introductory booklet
Space Marines Starter Price By Region: $170 (USA), $205 (Canada), $278 (Australia), £105 (UK), €135 (EU)
- Total MSRP: $329.5
- Savings Versus Box Price: $159.50
Getting Started With Orks Set
Current Getting Started with Orks Contents List:
- 1x Warboss
- 1x Weirdboy
- 20x Boyz
- 10x Gretchin
- 1x War Trakk
- 11x paints
- 1x starter paintbrush
- 1x texture spreader
- 1x Orks introductory booklet
Orks Starter Price By Region: $170 (USA), $205 (Canada), $278 (Australia), £105 (UK), €135 (EU)
- Total MSRP: $376
- Savings Versus Box Price: $206.50
The Introductory Set Is Where the New Minis Hide
Now we get to the part GW didn’t exactly put in neon lights. The Introductory Set is the cheapest of the three boxes, but it’s also where the new miniatures are hiding.
Warhammer 40k: Introductory Set: $77 (USA), $93 (Canada), $116 (Australia), £47 (UK), €61.50 (EU)
This bad boy comes with 12 minis, six paints, an introductory book, folding card terrain, a game mat, and the usual starter accessories. More importantly, every one of those 12 minutes is new for 11th Edition!
Here’s everything included:
- 1 Space Marines Lieutenant (the new-edition sculpt, exclusive to this box first)
- 5 Intercessors (push-fit, all-new)
- 1 Ork Nob (new edition launch sculpt)
- 5 Ork Boyz with a rocket launcha and a big shoota included
This is currently the only set carrying that fresh new Space Marine Lieutenant sculpt for 11th Edition, and the Ork Boyz add a rocket launcha and big shoota that look great mixed in with the Armageddon launch box Boyz squad. Either way, this is a little way for GW to sneak some extra buys out of the box.
Paint Sets Pair Each Faction with a Tools Bundle
If you’re starting out, this is a huge one because new paint sets round out the starter shelf with great support products. GW let us in on the three new paint sets on the way, covering both factions, plus a broader tools bundle:
Warhammer 40,000: Miniatures and Paint Sets
- Intercessors Paint Set $35 (USA), $45 (Canada), $57 (Australia), £21.50 (UK), €27.50 (EU): 6 faction-curated paints with a couple of characterful Space Marines minis.
- Ork Boyz Paint Set $35 (USA), $45 (Canada), $57 (Australia), £21.50 (UK), €27.50 (EU): 6 faction-curated paints with a couple of characterful Ork minis, plus a grot.
- Paints + Tools Set $45 (USA), $55 (Canada), $77 (Australia), £28 (UK), €35 (EU):13 Warhammer Colour paints, a starter brush, starter clippers, and a starter mould line scraper for hobbyists building their first kit collection.
Overall, these are the products every edition launch needs, but everybody forgets about them until they see them. So, if you’re trying to get a friend into 40k, the curated paint sets remove a lot of the first-trip confusion.
Combat Patrol: Battlezone Drops Push-Fit Terrain for the Kitchen Table
The terrain side of this reveal is where the launch wave starts to feel way bigger than just minis. Combat Patrol: Battlezone is the new unpainted push-fit scenery set with fold-out game boards and terrain footprints, scaled for Combat Patrol games and built to combine with the Starter Set terrain for full Strike Force-sized battles.
Anyone following the 11th Edition launch product lineup probably saw this coming, but GW also mentioned this will cost roughly the same price as a Combat Patrol ($170 currently).
GW will also be breaking the parts out for individual sale, which is a nice win for people that love making terrain. Need a single power line, ruined wall, or capacitor without buying the whole kit? Well, that’s finally an option now, too.
Warhammer 40k Battlefields: Armageddon Is the Ready-Painted Curveball
The ready-painted terrain is probably the reveal that’ll start the longest arguments at the FLGS counter. The massive new Battlefields: Armageddon comes with 28 pieces of factory-painted terrain, plus terrain footprints and folding double-sided game boards.
Clip the pieces off the sprue, push-fit them together, and you’ve got a table ready to go without spending three weekends drybrushing rubble.
Plenty of third-party companies already make pre-painted terrain, so this will come down to whether the factory finish looks good next to a hand-painted board. And you can bet store owners and kitchen-table players will be checking that the minute these kits hit shelves.
Just don’t get surprised by the price, GW said it will cost about two Combat Patrols, so expect around $350 for the terrain. Lastly, this won’t hit shelves until Fall at the earliest, or maybe even Q4, according to their preview stream.
Battle Mat: Armageddon Pairs with the Painted Terrain
GW also has the matching table surface ready to go. The Armageddon Battle Mat is a soft-touch fabric mat sized for Strike Force games, featuring a high-res battlefield image that pairs well with painted terrain or serves as a standalone upgrade.
So, for anyone going all-in on the Armageddon look, it’s the obvious companion piece and a neat bridge into whatever warzone GW lines up next on the 2026 40k roadmap.
Alternative 40k Pre-Painted Terrain Sets of Note:
- FLG Battlefield Ready Bundle ($199 to $254)
- Squad Marks Footprint Sets ($10 to $48)
- J15 Games 11th Edition Terrain Set ($150)
- Game Mat EU Area Terrain Footprints ($49)
- GSW Pre-Painted Foldable Pack (€125)
Final Thoughts on the New Warhammer 40k Starter Set Wave
So, where does this starter set release leave Warhammer 40k heading into 11th Edition proper? Well, overall, two things stand out.
- First, GW is treating 11th Edition as a full three-tier entry system instead of a single big starter-box drop, and putting new sculpts in the cheapest box makes that entry-level product way more interesting to veteran players than usual.
- Second, the ready-painted terrain experiment is getting a proper retail push instead of feeling like a limited test run.
The pricing and new Q&As will tell us a lot over the next couple of weeks. That’s where we’ll see whether the Battlefields: Armageddon line gets the wider roadmap follow-up, if individual terrain pieces make more sense than the full sets, and whether GW keeps locking fresh sculpts inside intro boxes as the edition rolls forward.
Where To Buy Your 11th Edition Warhammer 40k Starter Sets
Want a discount and fewer out-of-stock headaches? Hit our Warhammer retailer guide and grab the best option for your region. Links are below.
🔗 Related Reads:
- Best 40k 11th Edition Terrain Footprints + Sets To Buy
- Warhammer 40k 11th Edition Rules: Release Date, Detachments + Every Change
- 40k 11th Edition Launch Product Lineup: Combat Patrol Companion, Terrain Area Set, Rules + More
- Warhammer 40k Armageddon Starter Set Contents & Value Review
- Combat Patrol 40k: Best Boxes Ranked by Value
- The Best Warhammer 40k Starter Sets, Ranked
- 2026 Games Workshop Releases Roadmap
- What’s Next After Armageddon: Points, Rules, Miniatures
Which new Warhammer 40k Starter Set tier are you actually buying, and does the new Lieutenant gating change your pick?





























